US4320415A - Method of and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells - Google Patents

Method of and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US4320415A
US4320415A US06/156,798 US15679880A US4320415A US 4320415 A US4320415 A US 4320415A US 15679880 A US15679880 A US 15679880A US 4320415 A US4320415 A US 4320415A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
line
cells
cell
mobility
detected
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US06/156,798
Inventor
Robin Jones
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
National Research Development Corp UK
Original Assignee
National Research Development Corp UK
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by National Research Development Corp UK filed Critical National Research Development Corp UK
Assigned to NATIONAL RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION reassignment NATIONAL RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. Assignors: JONES ROBIN
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US4320415A publication Critical patent/US4320415A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N27/00Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means
    • G01N27/26Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means by investigating electrochemical variables; by using electrolysis or electrophoresis
    • G01N27/416Systems
    • G01N27/447Systems using electrophoresis
    • G01N27/44704Details; Accessories
    • G01N27/44717Arrangements for investigating the separated zones, e.g. localising zones
    • G01N27/44721Arrangements for investigating the separated zones, e.g. localising zones by optical means
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01PMEASURING LINEAR OR ANGULAR SPEED, ACCELERATION, DECELERATION, OR SHOCK; INDICATING PRESENCE, ABSENCE, OR DIRECTION, OF MOVEMENT
    • G01P3/00Measuring linear or angular speed; Measuring differences of linear or angular speeds
    • G01P3/64Devices characterised by the determination of the time taken to traverse a fixed distance
    • G01P3/80Devices characterised by the determination of the time taken to traverse a fixed distance using auto-correlation or cross-correlation detection means
    • G01P3/806Devices characterised by the determination of the time taken to traverse a fixed distance using auto-correlation or cross-correlation detection means in devices of the type to be classified in G01P3/68
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01PMEASURING LINEAR OR ANGULAR SPEED, ACCELERATION, DECELERATION, OR SHOCK; INDICATING PRESENCE, ABSENCE, OR DIRECTION, OF MOVEMENT
    • G01P5/00Measuring speed of fluids, e.g. of air stream; Measuring speed of bodies relative to fluids, e.g. of ship, of aircraft
    • G01P5/001Full-field flow measurement, e.g. determining flow velocity and direction in a whole region at the same time, flow visualisation

Abstract

The electrophoretic mobility of cells in a solution is measured by applying an electric potential along a cell. A linescan camera forms an image frame by line scanning the cell in a direction perpendicular to the cell movement. Two such image frames are correlated to determine cell mobility in the interval between the two frames. Each line scanned is processed to indicate detected cells and a digital number obtained. A frame is thus represented by a series of numbers which may be correlated. Alternatively and more simply each line is scanned and the presence of any detected cell represented by a logic ONE so that an image frame is represented by a series of logic ONES and ZEROS for correlation with a later series. Integration of successive mobility measurements improves the observed results. A tag inserter provides a visible mark on a television screen to indicate cells that are detected.

Description

The invention concerns a method and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells.
One test for the detection of malignant disease is termed the macrophage electrophoretic mobility test (MEM) and is reported in the literature e.g. Field & Caspary, Lancet ii 1337 (1970), British Medical Journal ii 613 (1971); Pritchard et al, Lancet ii 627 (1972), British Journal of Cancer 27.1 (1973).
Electrophoretic mobility is determined by measuring the time taken for a selected cell in a solution (e.g. KC1) to cross two lines a known and fixed distance apart under the influence of a potential difference between two electrodes in the solution. The progress of the cell is observed through a microscope alone or by means of a TV camera and monitor; cells in focus in the stationary layer are chosen at random for measurement and the potential difference is usually reversed for half the measurements to remove direction of migration effects. The timings are affected by an operator who starts and stops a clock. The average of as many timing pairs (one in each direction of movement) as possible are averaged by the formula ##EQU1## slowing where T1 is the average time for a sample without addition and T2 is the average time for a sample with the addition of antigen.
The manual determination of mobility is tedious and error prone through operator fatigue.
One method of measuring the velocity of particles in a fluid automatically is to use laser doppler velocimetry in which doppler shift of laser radiation reflected from moving particles is measured to indicate particle velocity. Unfortunately this technique is expensive and satisfactory results are difficult to achieve.
According to this invention a method of measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells comprises the steps of applying an electric potential to a solution in an electrophoretic chamber, scanning a portion of the chamber in a line by line manner to provide a first image frame, scanning to provide a second image frame a time τ later, cross correlating the two image frames to determine the image movement in the time τ and hence the cell mobility of a plurality of cells in the solution.
According to this invention apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells comprises an electrophoretic chamber having two spaced electrodes for applying an electric potential to a solution containing cells and separated from the electrodes by membranes, a linescan camera for producing signals representing image frames of the cells within the solution, and a correlator for cross correlating signals representing time spaced image frames to provide average cell mobility.
In one form of correlator each line scanned is processed to indicate the number of detected cells along that line and a digital number produced. One image frame is then represented by a series of digital numbers. Two or more of such series are cross correlated to provide the image shift.
In a more simplified version each line scanned is processed to show whether or not one cell is detected and a single logic one pulse provided for each line. No detected cells result in a logic zero being produced. Thus one image frame is represented by a series of logic ones and zeros. Two such series are cross correlated to provide the image shift.
The invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings of which:
FIG. 1 is a view of an electrophoretic chamber;
FIG. 2 is a cross section of part of the chamber of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram of apparatus for measuring cell mobility within the chamber of FIGS. 1, 2;
FIG. 4 are waveform diagrams of voltage against time;
FIGS. 5a and b are correlation and integrated correlation functions against video line time;
FIG. 5c is a graph of probability density function of image movement;
FIG. 6 is a view of cells within a chamber as seen on a video monitor.
As seen in FIGS. 1, 2 an electrophoretic apparatus comprises a glass chamber 1 having a flat sided centre portion 2, two electrodes 3, 4 at both ends and two membranes 5, 6 separating the electrodes, immersed in a saline solution 7, from the sample 8 of blood cells in solution (e.g. KC1). A sample 8 is passed into the chamber 1 through pipes 9, 10 controlled by taps 11, 12.
When an electric potential is applied between the electrodes 3, 4 cells migrate from one end of the chamber 1 to the other.
This movement is observed and measured by the apparatus shown in FIG. 3. The chamber is observed by a linescan camera 15 e.g. a television (TV) video camera and displayed via a tag inserter 32 on a TV monitor 16. The picture image obtained is shown in FIG. 6, where cells are seen as dark spots 18 or light coloured spots 19 surrounded by a dark ring depending on which side of focus the cell is. The light spots 19 in a ring are of interest and have placed to the side a light coloured rectangular tag 20 electronically generated (detailed later) to assist in setting up the apparatus.
A cell detector 21 produces a series of logic ones and zeros representing detection of cells in an image frame in the following manner.
The TV camera 15 produces a display by raster scanning cells in the chamber 2 in a series of lines in the well known manner e.g. two fields of 3121/2 lines interlaced. The direction of line scanning is perpendicular to the cell movement. Output from the camera 15 is a train of varying amplitude signals representing consecutive lines of the picture to be displayed. A total of 256 adjacent lines (out of 625) is chosen to form a single frame. As the camera 15 scans a line its vidicon output will be of two forms depending upon the type of cell scanned i.e. a dark spot (unwanted) or light spot in a dark ring (wanted). The vidicon output for part of a line is shown in FIG. 4a where a dark spot 18 is shown at (i) to have a single predominant peak and a light spot 19 in a dark ring is shown at (ii) to have a double peak. The two line signals FIG. 4a(i) and (ii) are passed through a differentiator 22 to produce signals respectively shown in FIG. 4b(i), (ii). FIG. 4b(i) has a negative peak followed by a positive peak whilst FIG. 4b(ii) has a positive peak followed by a negative peak.
Output from the differentiator 22 is split and passed through a negative threshold detector 23 and a positive threshold detector 24. The negative threshold detector 23 output triggers a monostable 25 whose output pulse (a logic one) is of short durection. The positive threshold detector 24 output triggers a monostable 26 whose output pulse length is adjusted to be the expected time between positive and negative transitions of the line signal. Both monostable 25, 26 outputs pass to an AND gate 27 whose output triggers a monostable 28 followed by a flip flop 29. This is shown in FIG. 4d where the output of monostables 25, 26, 28 and AND gate 27 are indicated for both the signals (i) and (ii) shown in FIG. 4a, b, c.
Thus if the differentiator 22 output results in a negative threshold followed by a positive threshold detection, FIG. 4c(i), there will be no coincidence at the AND gate 27, and no signal from the monostable 28 to the flip flop 29. However when the differentiator 22 output results in a positive followed by a negative threshold detection FIG. 4c(ii) there will be coincidence at the AND gate 27 resulting in a logic one pulse from the monostable 28 to place the flip flop 29 in its logic one state. Therefore, for each line scanned, when a wanted cell appears (a light spot in a dark ring) the flip flop 29 output is a logic one irrespective of how many wanted cells there are on the line. At the end of each line signal a line synchronisation pulse from the TV camera 15 via a synchronisation separator 31 resets the flip flop 29 to zero. The synchronisation separator 31 also provides a line synchronisation pulse and a frame synchronisation pulse to the correlator 30.
Output from the flip flop 29 is thus a logic one and zero for each line in the frame image and this series of logic ones and zeros is passed into a cross correlator 30 for cross correlation with a second series of logic ones and zeros representing a later image frame.
The monostable 28 output length is arranged to be of sufficient length that when fed via a tag inserter 32 to the TV monitor 16 it produces a visible rectangular shaped light coloured tag 20. Thus each detected cell 19 is followed on the same line by a visible tag 20 and gives confirmation to an operator that the threshold levels and timing has been correctly adjusted.
The cross correlator 30 may be hard wired e.g. a delay followed by two sets of shift registers or charge coupled devices (CCD) and multipliers. Alternatively a microprocessor, e.g. an RCA COSMAC microprocessor, may be used. The microprocessor system operates on a stored program held in a "read only memory" (ROM), accepts the flip flop output data, and stores it in an ordered array in random access memory (RAM). On command from a frame synchronizing pulse 256 such data elements (representing a frame) are stored away. The microprocessor then counts a selected number of frames (determined by the operator on the basis of expected picture shift) before accepting another 128 lines of data into its RAM (256 and 128) are chosen for convenience to give ±1 TV line in 128 resolution i.e. ≃ 2% (more or less can be chosen).
Two linear arrays of data consisting of a majority of logic zeros and a few ones representing cell positions is now stored away. These two arrays are compared element for element over 128 elements, corresponding to all the elements of the second array, and the number of times a one is detected in both is accumulated by the microprocessor. The number thus formed would represent a cross-correlation co-efficient. The relative shift of the two arrays is then indexed by one element and the process repeated. This is continued until 128 assimilated numbers has been formed from 128 relative shifts.
The list of numbers is then searched to identify the largest number and the index position of this peak is noted it being the most probable picture shift from a datum of zero shift. Positive or negative shift depending on the existing potential-difference polarity. The result may be as shown in FIG. 5a and may be displayed on a display unit 33 e.g. an oscilloscope or visible display unit (VDU).
Another or a number of other pairs of frames may be processed in the same way and accumulated by an integrator 34 to improve the signal to noise ratio before the peak is sought. FIG. 5b shows the integration of 30 image frame pairs.
One picture shift determined in this way is added into a probability density function FIG. 5c of shifts stored in the microprocessor RAM until a significant number (selected by the operator) have been accumulated of the same shift, this is then output as a number of TV lines of picture shift n calculated from frames N apart and if each TV line is calibrated to represent a known distance d meter in the electrophoretic cell the velocity of picture shift and hence velocity of the cells can be calculated from ##EQU2## 20×10-3 is one TV frame time and 64×10-6 is one TV line time for 50 Hz system (different for American 60 Hz system).
In a modification the flip flop is replaced by a counter which provides a digital number, representing detected cells, for each line scanned. The correlator may correlate one or a plurality of lines with a later line or number of lines.

Claims (6)

I claim:
1. A method of measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells comprising the steps of applying an electric potential to a solution in an electrophoretic chamber, scanning a portion of the chamber in a line by line manner to provide a first image frame, processing each line of scan to provide a digital number representing detected cells in that line and to provide a first set of numbers collectively representing the first image frame, scanning and processing to provide a second set of numbers representing a second image frame a time τ later, cross correlating the two sets of numbers to determine the image movement in the time τ and hence the cell mobility of a plurality of cells in the solution.
2. Apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells comprising an electrophoretic chamber having two spaced electrodes for applying an electric potential to a solution containing cells and separated from the electrodes by membranes, characterised by a line scan camera for producing signals representing image frames of the cells within the solution, means for processing the signal from each line of a scan from the camera to provide a digital number representing a number of detected cells in that line and a correlator for cross correlating numbers representing time spaced image frames to provide average cell mobility.
3. Apparatus as claimed in claim 2 wherein the means for processing each line of a scan from a camera indicates the presence or absence of detected cells in that line by a logic one or zero whereby at least part of an image frame is represented by a series of logic ones and zeros for correlation with a later series to indicate cell mobility.
4. Apparatus as claimed in claim 2 further comprising a tag inserter means for providing a visible mark on a television screen adjacent each cell detected.
5. Apparatus as claimed in claim 2 comprising an integrator for integrating the results of many mobility results.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 3 wherein the means for processing each line of a scan comprises a differentiator, two different threshold detectors, two monostables of different output pulse length having an input from the detectors and an output to an AND gate, and a flip flop set in to one state by the AND gate and reset after each line by a line synchronisation pulse from the camera.
US06/156,798 1979-06-14 1980-06-05 Method of and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells Expired - Lifetime US4320415A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB20672/79 1979-06-14
GB7920672 1979-06-14

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US4320415A true US4320415A (en) 1982-03-16

Family

ID=10505832

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US06/156,798 Expired - Lifetime US4320415A (en) 1979-06-14 1980-06-05 Method of and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US4320415A (en)
JP (1) JPS562544A (en)
DE (1) DE3022111A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2459473B1 (en)

Cited By (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4396903A (en) * 1981-05-29 1983-08-02 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Electro-optical system for correlating and integrating image data from frame-to-frame
US4464789A (en) * 1980-05-19 1984-08-07 Environmental Research Institute Of Michigan Image analyzer for processing multiple frames of image data
US4562593A (en) * 1982-03-08 1985-12-31 Mitsubishi Rayon Co., Ltd. Method for determination of percentage T cell content of lymphocyte
US4777597A (en) * 1983-01-08 1988-10-11 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
WO1989001620A1 (en) * 1987-08-13 1989-02-23 The Regents Of The University Of Michigan Optoelectric electrophoresis analysis systems
US4837733A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-06-06 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4839824A (en) * 1986-07-22 1989-06-13 Suncom Co., Ltd. Apparatus for measuring an object based on spatio-temporally derivated image signals
US4852050A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-07-25 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4862360A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-08-29 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4862358A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-08-29 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4868749A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-09-19 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4868746A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-09-19 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4884200A (en) * 1983-03-31 1989-11-28 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal detecting method in autoradiography
US4888695A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-12-19 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US5031099A (en) * 1988-10-28 1991-07-09 Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung Process for the evaluation of cell pictures
US5084157A (en) * 1988-03-21 1992-01-28 California Institute Of Technology Gel electrophoresis using time dependent contour controlled electric fields
US5095451A (en) * 1989-07-13 1992-03-10 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Centrifuge particle size analyzer
US5177607A (en) * 1990-08-27 1993-01-05 Zexel Corporation Method and apparatus for measuring velocity of fluid
US5194949A (en) * 1990-01-16 1993-03-16 Research Development Foundation Video densitometer
US5216596A (en) * 1987-04-30 1993-06-01 Corabi International Telemetrics, Inc. Telepathology diagnostic network
US5229849A (en) * 1984-09-17 1993-07-20 University Of Delaware Laser doppler spectrometer for the statistical study of the behavior of microscopic organisms
WO1994018800A1 (en) * 1993-02-04 1994-08-18 Research Development Foundation Video densitometer with determination of color composition
US5420628A (en) * 1990-01-16 1995-05-30 Research Development Foundation Video densitometer with determination of color composition
US5892602A (en) * 1995-02-10 1999-04-06 Optiment, Optical Metrology Ltd. Mobility measurement using conoscopic holography
US5920735A (en) * 1997-01-16 1999-07-06 Gelphman; Janet L. Method and apparatus to observe the geometry of relative motion

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS56119843A (en) * 1980-02-26 1981-09-19 Shimadzu Corp Electrophoresis measuring device
JPS56148049A (en) * 1980-04-18 1981-11-17 Shimadzu Corp Electrophoresis measuring apparatus for flat particle
US4459198A (en) * 1981-07-27 1984-07-10 Shimadzu Corporation Electrophoretic apparatus
JPS5844340A (en) * 1981-09-10 1983-03-15 Kureha Chem Ind Co Ltd Method and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility
JPS5987369A (en) * 1982-11-10 1984-05-19 Nippon Furnace Kogyo Kaisha Ltd Method for measuring speed in water current model
DE3711918C2 (en) * 1987-04-08 1998-05-28 Gsf Forschungszentrum Umwelt Automatic particle tracking method
DE19643256A1 (en) * 1996-10-19 1998-04-30 Koch Neuburg Wassermesser Und Method and device for determining the flow or speed of flowing or moving media

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3868498A (en) * 1972-03-29 1975-02-25 Contraves Ag Method and apparatus for determining errors during counting of particles
US4025718A (en) * 1974-12-10 1977-05-24 Comitato Nazionale Per L'energia Nucleare Method and apparatus for recording in a memory trajectories and traces of objects
US4168510A (en) * 1978-01-16 1979-09-18 Cbs Inc. Television system for displaying and recording paths of motion
US4179704A (en) * 1977-12-27 1979-12-18 Cbs Inc. Television system for displaying and recording paths of motion
US4218703A (en) * 1979-03-16 1980-08-19 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Technique for estimation of displacement and/or velocity of objects in video scenes

Family Cites Families (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3723712A (en) * 1971-10-12 1973-03-27 Komline Sanderson Eng Corp Method for agglomeration measuring and control
US3793180A (en) * 1972-03-21 1974-02-19 Singer Co Laser-recticle electrophoresis instrument
FR2325040A1 (en) * 1975-09-16 1977-04-15 Degremont IMPROVED APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR MEASURING THE MOBILITY OF COLLOIDS IN AN ELECTRIC FIELD
US4097153A (en) * 1976-05-17 1978-06-27 Sentrol Systems Ltd. Method and apparatus for measuring the electrophoretic mobility of suspended particles
DD133469B1 (en) * 1977-09-08 1980-12-10 Klaus Friedel METHOD FOR MEASURING THE ELECTROPHORETIC MOBILITY OF PARTICLES

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3868498A (en) * 1972-03-29 1975-02-25 Contraves Ag Method and apparatus for determining errors during counting of particles
US4025718A (en) * 1974-12-10 1977-05-24 Comitato Nazionale Per L'energia Nucleare Method and apparatus for recording in a memory trajectories and traces of objects
US4179704A (en) * 1977-12-27 1979-12-18 Cbs Inc. Television system for displaying and recording paths of motion
US4168510A (en) * 1978-01-16 1979-09-18 Cbs Inc. Television system for displaying and recording paths of motion
US4218703A (en) * 1979-03-16 1980-08-19 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Technique for estimation of displacement and/or velocity of objects in video scenes

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Lancet, Dec. 26, 1970, Field et al., "Lymphocyte Sensitisation: An In-Vitro Test For Cancer?", pp. 1337-1341. *

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4464789A (en) * 1980-05-19 1984-08-07 Environmental Research Institute Of Michigan Image analyzer for processing multiple frames of image data
US4396903A (en) * 1981-05-29 1983-08-02 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Electro-optical system for correlating and integrating image data from frame-to-frame
US4562593A (en) * 1982-03-08 1985-12-31 Mitsubishi Rayon Co., Ltd. Method for determination of percentage T cell content of lymphocyte
US4777597A (en) * 1983-01-08 1988-10-11 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4837733A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-06-06 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4888695A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-12-19 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4852050A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-07-25 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4862360A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-08-29 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4862358A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-08-29 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4868749A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-09-19 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4868746A (en) * 1983-01-08 1989-09-19 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal processing method in autoradiography
US4884200A (en) * 1983-03-31 1989-11-28 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Signal detecting method in autoradiography
US5229849A (en) * 1984-09-17 1993-07-20 University Of Delaware Laser doppler spectrometer for the statistical study of the behavior of microscopic organisms
US4839824A (en) * 1986-07-22 1989-06-13 Suncom Co., Ltd. Apparatus for measuring an object based on spatio-temporally derivated image signals
US5297034A (en) * 1987-04-30 1994-03-22 Corabi International Telemetrics, Inc. Telepathology diagnostic network
US5216596A (en) * 1987-04-30 1993-06-01 Corabi International Telemetrics, Inc. Telepathology diagnostic network
WO1989001620A1 (en) * 1987-08-13 1989-02-23 The Regents Of The University Of Michigan Optoelectric electrophoresis analysis systems
US5084157A (en) * 1988-03-21 1992-01-28 California Institute Of Technology Gel electrophoresis using time dependent contour controlled electric fields
US5031099A (en) * 1988-10-28 1991-07-09 Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung Process for the evaluation of cell pictures
US5095451A (en) * 1989-07-13 1992-03-10 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Centrifuge particle size analyzer
US5194949A (en) * 1990-01-16 1993-03-16 Research Development Foundation Video densitometer
US5420628A (en) * 1990-01-16 1995-05-30 Research Development Foundation Video densitometer with determination of color composition
US5177607A (en) * 1990-08-27 1993-01-05 Zexel Corporation Method and apparatus for measuring velocity of fluid
WO1993014599A1 (en) * 1992-01-15 1993-07-22 University Of Delaware Laster doppler spectrometer for the statistical study of the behavior of microscopic organisms
WO1994018800A1 (en) * 1993-02-04 1994-08-18 Research Development Foundation Video densitometer with determination of color composition
US5892602A (en) * 1995-02-10 1999-04-06 Optiment, Optical Metrology Ltd. Mobility measurement using conoscopic holography
US5920735A (en) * 1997-01-16 1999-07-06 Gelphman; Janet L. Method and apparatus to observe the geometry of relative motion

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS562544A (en) 1981-01-12
FR2459473A1 (en) 1981-01-09
FR2459473B1 (en) 1985-06-21
DE3022111A1 (en) 1980-12-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4320415A (en) Method of and apparatus for measuring electrophoretic mobility of cells
US5081530A (en) Three dimensional camera and range finder
US4365307A (en) Temperature pattern measuring device
US4413324A (en) Temperature pattern measuring method and a device therefor
GB2168874A (en) Image-motion distortion correction
JPH0661324B2 (en) Radiography device
US4627724A (en) Radiation scanning and detection system
GB2054839A (en) Determining electrophoretic mobility of cells
US3644046A (en) Method and apparatus for measuring interferometer fringe patterns
Campana Techniques for evaluating charge coupled imagers
Tyml et al. A method for on-line measurements of red cell velocity in microvessels using computerized frame-by-frame analysis of television images
US4707735A (en) Surveillance systems
US4088979A (en) Underwater imaging system
JPS647549B2 (en)
US4972262A (en) Real time edge detection
GB2205155A (en) Object movement measuring apparatus
US5177607A (en) Method and apparatus for measuring velocity of fluid
SU983471A1 (en) Color tv pyrometer
US3829609A (en) Image-splitting devices for sizing instruments
JP3083010B2 (en) Method and apparatus for measuring dimensions using images
EP0099229A2 (en) Image measuring system
SU1050132A1 (en) Method of forming stereo pair images
JPS60152908A (en) Irregular shape detector of body
SU940040A1 (en) Particle electrophoresis mobility measuring method
JPS6118229B2 (en)

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: NATIONAL RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, P.O. BO

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST.;ASSIGNOR:JONES ROBIN;REEL/FRAME:003887/0348

Effective date: 19800515

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE